He abandoned the bed, and before leaving to go to the kitchen, looked at Isabel MarÃa's nakedness for a minute; two small breasts, two red, sore nipples and a little triangle of quite lank, uncombed dark hair. He poured himself some coffee, lit a cigarette, and went back to the bedroom smoking and carrying a knife. He sank it into her chest, under her left breast, and she barely flinched. Why? he wondered again, before putting his cigarette out in the ashtray next to the bed and deciding he should dress her so they didn't find her naked. Then, as he moved Isabel MarÃa's pillow, he felt the cold weight of the knife she had hidden there, perhaps to fulfil her own mandate. Just then José Antonio remembered he had to get a move on, for his wife hated eating without him.
Mario Conde, 9 August 1989
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“You bastard, now you need a title . . .”
“Forget that. Just tell me what you made of the story?”
“A real scream.”
“Is that all?”
“Well, squalid.”
“And moving?”
“As well.”
“Do you like it?”
“Terribly.”
“But terribly good or terribly bad?”
“Good, you idiot, good. Let me give you a hug, you pansy. Fuck, you've finally got back to writing.”
The Count bent over the wheelchair between the open arms of Skinny Carlos and let himself be squeezed against his friend's greasy, sweaty chest. Knowing he could write and that what he'd written appealed to Skinny Carlos was a combination too explosive for the Count's emotions and he felt he was about to cry, not only for his own sake, but for a future that was impossible to imagine without a man who'd been his best-only friend for over twenty years, whose goodness, intelligence, optimism and desire to live life had been rewarded by a bullet in the back, shot from some still unknown rifle, hidden behind a dune in the Namibian desert.
“Congratulations, you bastard. But bring me a photocopy tomorrow or never look me in the face again. I know you, you'll wake up one day saying it's a load of shit and tear it up.”
“It's a deal, pal.”
“Hey, but this is cause for celebration, right? Take the twenty pesos in the drawer. Add ten of your own and buy two bottles of that Legendario they've put out in the bar in Santa Catalina today.”
“Two?”
“Yes, one each, right?”
“God, how horrible!” said the Count.
“Hey, what horrible god? My lovely lad, all this consorting with queers doesn't do you much good, just listen to you.”
“Yes, something sticks. A sparrow's butt, for instance.”
“Tell me more.”
“No, later. I'm going to fetch the two bottles. Stay right there, OK?”
“Hey, wait a minute. I'll read the story to the old girl and, if she likes it, expect to eat well.”
“And if not?”
“Rice and tortilla.”
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Josefina blew her nose on her handkerchief, and said: “Ay, the poor girl, my boy, being killed like that just for fun. The things you think of. And that poor bus driver . . . But I was moved, and this son of mine says it's the best Cuban story in the world, and if that's what he says, well, I got a bit inspired and started to think what kind of meal I could get for you so you don't drink your rum on an empty stomach, and what I did was real silly, the first thing I thought of, though I reckon it will taste real good: turkey stuffed with rice and black beans.”
“A turkey?”
“Stuffed?”
“Yes, and it's very easy to make. Look, I bought the turkey yesterday and defrosted the fridge today, it was still soft, so I took it out and basted it while it was thawing. I made garlic, pepper, cumin, oregano, bay, basil and parsley leaves into a paste and, naturally, bitter orange and salt, and basted it well inside and out with that paste. Then I threw in plenty of big slices of onion. The best would be to leave it a couple of hours basted, but as I can see you look starved . . . Then, as
I'd already got black beans on the boil, I started to prepare a tasty sauce: I took two strips of bacon I cut into small pieces and fried, and put more onion in the fat, but cut tiny, with ground garlic and plenty of chilli, and there you go, I poured the sauce on the beans when they were almost cooked and added a cup of dry wine, so they taste a bit sour, the way you like them, right?”
“Yes, that's how I love them.”
“Me too.”
“And what else?”
“Well, I poured in the white rice to make the
congrÃ
, a bit more oregano, and for good measure a pinch of salt, and a handful of finely chopped onion. Then I waited for the rice to dry out, before the grains went soft, of course, and switched it off and stuffed the turkey with the
congrÃ
, so it cooks inside the bird, right? You know what I didn't have? Toothpicks to close it up . . . So I used a few stems from the bitter oranges, which are pretty hard . . . Then put it in the oven, so don't despair, it will soon be ready. Have your drinks in peace, and it will be on the table at nine thirty. And pour me a drop of rum . . . That's it, just a drop, Condesito, or I'll get drunk . . .”
“And how many are going to eat this, Jose?”
“As the bird was about eight pounds, there'll be enough for ten or twelve helpings . . . but with you two . . . Well, I hope something will be left for lunch tomorrow. I'll just go and have a look.”
“Did you hear that, you bastard? The old dear's mad.”
“What I'd like to know is where the fuck she gets it all . . . The only thing she didn't have were the toothpicks.”
“Don't be such a nosy policeman. Pour me some . . . This rum is good for getting a skinful and taking a running jump.”
“What's the matter, Skinny?”
Carlos downed more rum and didn't answer.
“Is it still the business with Dulcita?” the Count asked, and his friend looked at him for a moment.
“Smell that, the bird's really cooking,” he said, going off at an opportune tangent. “Hey, do you know what should come after a feast like this? A decent cigar. A Montecristo or something of the sort, right?”
“Fuck, of course, a Montecristo,” the Count replied, downing his rum in one gulp. “It has to be a Montecristo,” he said, as he finally saw the face he'd sensed in his dream, where a dirty, raging river suddenly precipitated the fall of the mask, a mask made of a thousand lies which had hidden the truth from him. Yes, that had to be the truth!
Nothing can justify such a crime, was the most sophisticated philosophical conclusion he could reach as he felt the cold water on his back. The vivid memory of the whole bottle of pale Legendario rum still coursed rich and bitter round his mouth, though he was surprised to discover he was hungry and hadn't much of a headache. How could it be? In the kitchen, after swallowing a couple of analgesics, he looked alarmed as the funnel to his coffee pot swallowed his last stocks of coffee and waited for it to strain and for Sergeant Manuel Palacios to arrive, pulled on his old blue jeans â you're dead thirsty, he told himself, observing the remains of an evil liverish stain on the cloth at thigh level and on his pockets â and went out on to the porch, as he did every Sunday, to savour a whiff of nostalgia for life in the neighbourhood that was also transvested, metamorphosed, definitively different, where he'd felt happy or miserable, in like doses, on many other Sundays in his life, ever since he'd been conscious of life. The church bells had tolled for no one for many a year, and that invigorating smell of freshly baked bread had never again floated from the nearby bakery, what's bread made of now, if it doesn't smell like it used to? But he resisted; despite these absences, it was a simply wonderful day: the previous evening's heavy downpour had swept away the filth from heaven and earth, and the sun's brightness triumphed over any darkening doubts. A good
day to play baseball (but was there also the will?), the Count thought, and he went back in for his coffee and drank a big cupful, a bitter swill round to clear out the last phantoms of sleep, alcohol and hangover. As he lit his cigarette, he heard the car horn calling him from the street. Shirt unbuttoned, he went out on to the pavement, and as he opened the car door, greeted Sergeant Manuel Palacios.
“Well, tell me where,” Manuel Palacios mumbled, making it clear he was ready to obey.
“I've fucked up your Sunday?”
“No, of course not.”
The Count smiled. That's all I need, he told himself, thinking he too would have preferred not to work on Sunday and to stay at home, sleeping, reading, or even writing, now he'd started to write again. But he said: “Let's go to Headquarters, the Boss is there . . . Hey, did you find Salvador?”
“No, not yet.”
Manuel Palacios started up the car, without looking at his boss, and when they reached the church the Count decided to show his hand.
“Look, Manolo, I've thought of something to wind up this case. That's why I called you.”
He waited in vain for a response from his colleague and continued: “Do you remember there was a bit of a Montecristo cigar among the things they found in the place where Alexis was killed?” And he waited. He didn't wait long.
“Fuck, you're right, Conde! Do you think . . .? No, it can't be. His father . . .?”
“Let's see if we can find the butt of the Montecristo I gave the Boss and if the lab can tell us if they're similar. Even if they're only distant relations, I think Faustino Arayán has hit the jackpot with a single ticket.”
Manuel Palacios, conclusively persuaded by Conde's reasoning, put his foot down and the car lurched off fearfully.
“Easy does it, we've got time.”
“No, the quicker this is sorted, the quicker I'm on the razzle . . . If you'd seen the girl I picked up yesterday . . .”
While Manuel Palacios told him of the virtues of his newly promised â he sometimes called them that, though there was never a single promise, even in the realm of fantasy, and according to the lieutenant's tally he was on number sixteen for the year â the Count tried to imagine what had happened in the Havana Woods the night of the day of the Transfiguration, but was thwarted by an inability to fable: what had happened? A father who kills his son? What about the two coins? he wondered as Sergeant Palacios turned into the Headquarters parking lot, as tranquil and sunny as everything else that August.
Determined to take advantage of the peace and quiet of the Sabbath, the Count waited for the lift to arrive empty, to avoid for once the climb to the top floor. But when the metal doors slid open, he felt a thump in his chest: there were three men in the lift, dressed in combat gear, without stripes on their shoulders, staring at him hard. His mind, which had to decide what to do in the scant seconds the open door allowed, finally signalled that he should say good-day and get in the metal box, rather than run to the stairs, as he wanted to do. The men returned his greeting and the Count turned his back on them and looked at the panel which indicated floor levels. His skin smarted from the inspection he'd been subjected to: perhaps those same three were the ones who'd questioned Sergeant Manuel Palacios, revealing they knew
chapter and verse about the life of Mario Conde. Perhaps these three were the ones who decreed his friend Fatman Contreras should be suspended and even took poor Maruchi out of Central Station. Perhaps they were the emissaries of a new Apocalypse: the Count imagined them in the long robes of Inquisitors, ready to burn pyres and use the rack. The anti-natural law of police who spy on other police had put there three of its undesirable but unavoidable executors, whom the Count regretted giving anything, even as basic as a good-day, when he felt the lift brake on the third floor and the men excused themselves and departed the cage, saying: See you, lieutenant, while he held out his hand and pressed number four, and denied them an answer, stood on his dignity.
When he entered the deserted ante-room to Major Rangel's office, the Count found his face was burning the way it does when somebody hits you and homicidal furies are unleashed and you become a blind bull only fit to attack. He decided to wait till the malign vapours dissolved in his blood, then walked towards the glass door and heard the voice of the Boss, on the phone, he concluded, when he didn't get a reply, and knocked gently on the door.
“Come in, Mario,” said the Boss. How the hell does the bastard always know when I'm around?
The Count waved at him and waited for his boss to finish his call. The Boss said “yes” two or three times, and hung up the receiver as if afraid he'd break it. The Count observed that, though it was Sunday, the Major was wearing his uniform. Something bad was brewing.
“There's no peace, Conde, no peace,” he said and looked though the windows. “And what are you doing here? Did you get to see Eligio yesterday? Have you solved your case?”
“I think I'm well on the way.”
“How many days you've been on this wretched case?”
“Four.”
“Four days and you think you're well on the way?”
“I need something from you . . .” And he saw his boss's lips smile sceptically. “Don't worry, it's very simple. Have you smoked the Montecristo I gave you the other day?”
“Yes, why?” asked Rangel startled, finally turning to look at the Count.
“Where's the butt?”
“Now what's got into you, Mario?”
“I need that butt. I've got an idea . . .”
“You've got an idea. How strange . . . Look, it must be in the basket, they didn't empty the rubbish yesterday,” said the Major, picking the wastepaper basket from the floor and exclaiming, “Here it is. Its thickness gave it away . . . Why do you need this, Conde?”